A suitcase I can love

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I love travelling. I love seeing new places or visiting family, but I have always hated suitcases. They just don’t seem to work: the handles break, the wheels don’t quite roll, or they go from cuboid to lumpy masses. No matter how well you pack, your clothes are disorganized when to arrive and harder to pack when you leave. They are awkward to roll through the airport, which I think would be a priority for luggage designers.

Wouldn’t that be a cool job? Luggage designer. Has a nice ring to it

Esther and I bought suitcases last year, we had a lot of travelling to do. Before our purchase, I used hand-me downs or backpacks and dufflebags.

You would be amazed at what you can fit in a ALICE pack.

Until we bought our suitcases, I would pack everything, but I learned how to pack lean, and now my issues are not what to put in the suitcase, but the suitcase itself.

While the price tag on the ZUCA is a little high, okay, outrageous, it may appear that you get what you pay for.

ZÜCA Videos.

The 20 Stupidest GI Joe Vehicles Ever

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Sometimes mockery of one’s childhood heros is the perfect thing to pull one out of the dumps and start the synapses firing.

…easily the most devastating weapon in the COBRA arsenal, if viewed from the perspective of a weary parks groundskeeper.

The 20 Stupidest GI Joe Vehicles Ever | Cracked.com

“Some trick of forced perspective”

Thinking outside the box.

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Used against the IRA:

One of the most interesting operations was the laundry mat [sic]. Having lost many troops and civilians to bombings, the Brits decided they needed to determine who was making the bombs and where they were being manufactured. One bright fellow recommended they operate a laundry and when asked “what the hell he was talking about,” he explained the plan and it was incorporated — to much success.

The plan was simple: Build a laundry and staff it with locals and a few of their own. The laundry would then send out “color coded” special discount tickets, to the effect of “get two loads for the price of one,” etc. The color coding was matched to specific streets and thus when someone brought in their laundry, it was easy to determine the general location from which a city map was coded.

While the laundry was indeed being washed, pressed and dry cleaned, it had one additional cycle — every garment, sheet, glove, pair of pants, was first sent through an analyzer, located in the basement, that checked for bomb-making residue. The analyzer was disguised as just another piece of the laundry equipment; good OPSEC [operational security]. Within a few weeks, multiple positives had shown up, indicating the ingredients of bomb residue, and intelligence had determined which areas of the city were involved. To narrow their target list, [the laundry] simply sent out more specific coupons [numbered] to all houses in the area, and before long they had good addresses. After confirming addresses, authorities with the SAS teams swooped down on the multiple homes and arrested multiple personnel and confiscated numerous assembled bombs, weapons and ingredients. During the entire operation, no one was injured or killed.

via Schneier on Security: Clever Counterterrorism Tactic.

How Crayons Are Made

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YouTube – Sesame Street – How Crayons Are Made.

I remember this video from my youth (it was aired on Mr. Rogers, not Sesame Street). The music and the cinematography are all good. I did visit a Crayola crayon factory at some point in my early grade school years and the smell of all that wax was intoxicating.

It makes me want to run out and buy a fresh box of crayons for Hazel, just so I can smell them, hold them and let my creative juices flow like they did when I was young and unrestricted.

Amen Break

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Nate Harrison.

A lengthy video regarding the history and integration in to popular music of the Amen Break. Not a piece of cinematographic excellence, but the audio is great for a background listen.

I match all 10, do you?

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Creative people combine playfulness and discipline, or responsibility and irresponsibility. There is no question that a playfully light attitude is typical of creative individuals. But this playfulness doesn’t go very far without its antithesis, a quality of doggedness, endurance, perseverance.

Psychology Today: The Creative Personality.

All the creative people I know fit most if not all these traits. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi hits the nail on the head with some fascinating research to back it up.